Everton shirt cuffs are blue, only the collar is
white. The shorts are white, the socks are white.
There is no need for a badge on the shirt, we are the team that
plays in blue and white. Everyone knows who we are. We
don't need to tell them.

As a player, he was one of Everton's pre-War
professionals. Unheralded, unsung and unassuming, but he was
the ideal club man who gave yeoman service. He signed
professional for Everton from Cheadle Heath in 1937. Everton
were fortunate in having his services during the War years when he
was a most prolific goal scorer. Five feet nine inches and
11 st 8 lbs, he had the ideal build for an attack leader, his
tenacity and tireless roving being contributing factors to his
success.

Alex Young: What was he like to play for?
Hellish! Before Harry Catterick even arrived at Everton the
top sports writer for the Liverpool Echo at that time, Leslie
Edwards, warned me to beware. He said Harry Catterick was
after my blood because he didnít like the way that I played, and
that was before Iíd ever met the man!

It never changed all the time I was there. It was a
constant battle all the time I played for him. He couldnít
encourage me to play because if he said anything I didnít
believe him. He had some good sides, but I donít think he
liked to go a great deal for flair players. I think he
preferred other types. (From Talking Blue by Becky
Tallentire)

Headmaster of Blues stylish school of science

Aug 12 2002

By Len Capeling, Daily Post

RIGHT at the close of a century which had seen him surrender the
title of Everton's most successful manager, prime-time television
played a dirty trick on Harry Catterick.

Casting around for an actor to play the Everton legend in a
docudrama about the downfall of Tony Kay, the film's producers lost
their marbles and gave the part to the portly, prattling
actor-dramatist Colin Welland.

It was an insult, a travesty, M'Lud.

There was the elegant Harry, who prided himself on his measured
words, his tidy figure, his well-groomed head, and his
expensively-tailored mohair suits being grotesquely caricatured as
some ranting, rotund Yorkshireman who sounded like a Barnsley
barrow-boy and had the dress sense to shame even Kenneth Clarke.

Imagine what the Cat must have thought, peering down on this
fearful scene from his lofty vantage point in the Blue Heaven
promised to Goodison heroes.

He would have put a boot through his harp, hurled some colourful
celestial cuss words - along with a passing thunderbolt - at one of
the worst theatrical take-offs since Dick Van Dyke essayed his
gorblimey Cockney in Mary Poppins.

Apparently no-one had told Colin Welland that any accent Harry
may have possessed in his Darlington childhood had long been sanded
away by an Alf Ramseystyle voice job before he landed back at
Goodison Park in 1961.

Where Welland played Catterick as a flatulent chancer with a
glutinous, Yorkshire pudding delivery, the Goodison boss in fact
spoke in the measured tones of a frost-rimmed civil servant anxious
to impress, particularly on the social scene.

Where Welland was gross and unbuttoned, Catterick was the very
model of the reserved soccer scholar in an age when there were more
rough edges on managers than spikes on a porcupine.

For that reason, Catterick was probably one of the least
understood of 60s managers.

Stern as a Presbyterian preacher, a stickler for discipline and
for players knowing their place - all their interviews came via
Harry - he looked as if he had difficulty in smiling with his eyes.

My take on him was of a remote and solitary figure, lacking real
warmth, though part of that perception may have stemmed from the
great contrast in character between the two Merseyside managers of
that era.

Set against the mega-mouthed, Messianic Bill Shankly, from whom
the lava of life seemed to flow, the dissimilarity couldn't have
been more marked.

Did the Everton fans care? Not a bit.

Not then, and not now. For when it came to the important business
of winning trophies in the Beatles era, Catterick was in no way
outshone by the glamorous Scot from across the Park.

In fact, the achievements of the two men in the years up to 1970
are surprisingly similar - both won two first division
championships, and an FA Cup, and both held on to prominent
positions in the league throughout the decade.

Some of the praise for Catterick has been grudging, possibly
because he never sought favour with the Press. Never set out to be a
man of the people.

On the contrary, he had a reputation for tetchiness that the
equally peppery Shanks managed to keep hidden from public view.

But that dourness did mean that when it came to the oxygen of
publicity, Shankly, superbly quotable, knew how to fuel it, while
Harry played a publicity game later trademarked by Kenny Dalglish.

That probably led to Catterick's formidable record being
undervalued, even to this day.

But from the moment ambitious chairman John Moores summoned him
back from Hillsborough to the club he'd previously served as a
rough-and-ready centreforward, Harry Catterick wrote himself into
the record books as an outstanding manager.

Typical of Moores, the call for Catterick came after the
Littlewoods multi-millionaire - always a winner - had written a taxi
ride with Everton's previous boss, Johnny Carey, into the folklore
of soccer sackings.

What Moores demanded - nothing less than the championship -
Catterick delivered.

A mere 12 months after his appointment the Blues were on their
way to their sixth title triumph, won by one of the purest
footballing sides in Everton's distinguished history.

It came after the brutal winter of '63 when the league - pre-undersoil
heating - hunkered down for six weeks, a pause used by the crafty
Catterick to strengthen his hand with the signings of Tony Kay and
Alex Scott - two vital elements in a terrific team that also
included Roy Vernon, Alex Young, Jimmy Gabriel, Brian Labone, Alex
Parker, Gordon West and Johnny Morrissey.

Three years later, with the influential Kay gone (to jail for his
part match-fixing while with Sheffield Wednesday) and a new team
still under construction, Everton won the FA Cup against the same
Yorkshire side after one of the most memorable encounters in the
competition's history (3-2 the final score - cue the galloping Derek
Temple, cue an audacious managerial gamble on unknown striker Mike
Trebilcock).

Already Catterick had in place one-third of Everton's
greatest-ever midfield trinity.

The youthful Colin Harvey would be joined later that World
Cup-winning year by the phenomenal Alan Ball, and, in March 1967, by
Howard Kendall.

They helped drive Everton on, via a losing Cup final in 1968, to
another championship triumph in 1970, and, with the new
centreforward sensation Joe Royle knocking in the goals, Goodison
smiled broadly.

Only to awaken shortly afterwards to the frightening sound of a
season that plunged the new champs to 14th place in Division One.

Alan Ball departed in mysterious circumstances, injury finished
the illustrious career of Mr Reliable, Brian Labone, and Harry
Catterick lost his magic and his health with it.

Driving back from Sheffield in January 1972, he suffered a
serious heart attack and a year later found himself shunted sideways
and replaced by another ex-Everton player, the personable Billy
Bingham.

In March 1985 - still Everton's most successful manager - Harry
Catterick had another coronary, this time at Goodison Park during
the game against Ipswich Town

Despite frantic attempts to revive him by paramedics and the
Everton club doctor, Harry Catterick died at the ground where he'd
helped restore lost pride and the will to win in style.

Ironically, his death came in the blossoming early days of the
Howard Kendall era, an era which would see Harry eventually being
overtaken as Everton's most successful manager by one of his most
successful signings.

But Catterick is not devalued by that second spot in the hall of
fame, far from it says Brian Labone who was Harry's skipper from
1964 onwards, and an England regular at centre-half. Labone also
takes issue with some of the judgments on Catterick as being a
bleak, unemotional, uncommunicative man.

"He could keep you at arm's length," Brian admitted,
"but at the same time he was a good communicator with his
players. He could let his hair down, too. He was a lover of fine
wines and fine cigars.

"He was tough. He didn't hesitate to let you know if he
thought you weren't playing well enough. But by the same token he
would reward you by inviting you for a game of golf.

"He was a very good manager, a tremendous tactician, a great
thinker about the game and like all ex-centre-forwards he wanted the
foundations of his team to be down the middle - goalkeeper,
centre-half, centre-forward. Look at his record in the 60s. I think
Everton were only out of the top six once and that was the year we
won the FA Cup in 1966. He was one of the first to have the charts
in the dressing-room, with the magnetic counters.

"Obviously I liked him because he picked me all the time,
but I always found him very straight in all my dealings with him as
captain. I very rarely saw him blow his top in the dressing room.
He'd perhaps pull an individual to one side, but he'd never belittle
you in front of others. And that counts for a lot with players.

"He made Everton a very attractive side, full of goals, full
of good players. I think that's his legacy as much as anything else.
I think the flamboyance of Shankly made him appear less exciting.

"But on the other hand I think he enjoyed the image of
himself as the thinking man's manager,

"We used to joke that he was the only manager with creases
in his tracksuit trousers, but it was said in fun and we respected
him for his ability, and Everton's centenary in the top division
reminds us how much we all owe him."

No more needs to be said, except to invite Harry, wherever he is,
to take a bow, to acknowledge the cheers of those of us lucky enough
to have been around when the school of science held classes.

I wish I could assure him that an apology from Colin Welland is
winging its way to Cloud Nine. I can't.

But I do still wonder who should have played Harry's game in his
absence.